Giselle

November 6—10, 2019

Giselle

November 6—10, 2019

About the Ballet

Created during the great Romantic era of ballet, Giselle premiered at Paris Opéra Ballet on June 28, 1841. A haunting tale of love, betrayal and forgiveness, that encapsulates the sensibility of Romanticism. Giselle is the story is of a young peasant girl who is overcome with grief and madness by her lover’s deception. Upon her death, she is transported into the ghostly world of the Wilis, the spirits of betrayed young women.

The title role has always been a touchstone and a proving ground for the world’s greatest prima ballerinas, not simply for the enormous technical demands the choreography poses, but for the intensity and depth of emotional commitment that it requires. The work also affords the Corps de Ballet the opportunity to shine, with the ghostly diagonal procession of the Willis remaining one of the most haunting moodily evocative images in all of ballet.

“Giselle is a timeless masterpiece... pure classical dancing at its finest.” National Post

Reviews

“Absolute perfection in terms of grace, harmony and style.” —The Globe and Mail

“When Giselle’s underlying themes of love, betrayal, forgiveness and redemption are told through the poetry of dance, they take on a power that is almost epic in its ability to stir the emotions… a show to remember.” —National Post

“Evocative and beautiful.” —Danceview Times

Running Time

Act I50m

Intermission20m

Act II50m

Total (approx)2h

Credits

Choreography and Production:Sir Peter Wright after the choreography of Jean Coralli and Marius Petipa

Music:
Adolphe Adam, revised by Joseph Horovitz

Set and Costume Design:
Desmond Heeley

Lighting Design:
Gil Wechsler

Giselle was produced as a memorial to the late William P. Walker and was made possible through the courtesy of many generous friends of the National Ballet.